The Learning Leader Show With Ryan Hawk - 683: Nir Eyal - How to Break Limiting Beliefs, Create Your Own Luck, Transform Your Relationships, and Start Seeing Opportunities Everyone Else Is Missing
Episode Date: April 12, 2026Order my new book, The Price of Becoming... www.LearningLeader.com/Becoming This is brought to you by Insight Global. If you need to hire one person, hire a team of people, or transform your business ...through Talent or Technical Services, Insight Global's team of 30,000 people around the world has the hustle and grit to deliver. My Guest: Nir Eyal is a Stanford lecturer, behavioral designer, and bestselling author who has spent his career at the intersection of psychology, technology, and human behavior. He's one of the most rigorous thinkers alive on why people do what they do, and what it actually takes to change. Notes Julie introduced Nir to the Turnaround technique. Nir and Julie met the first week of college in 1997 and have been married since 2001. A big part of the genesis of Beyond Belief came from Julie introducing Nir to this technique called The Turnaround, which comes out of the work from Byron Katie, that she used with her mother to repair the relationship she had with her mom. A limiting belief is a belief that saps motivation and increases suffering. It does that by creating short-term relief from discomfort. "I hate public speaking, I'm no good at public speaking, so I'm going to avoid public speaking." You reduce your motivation to go on stage, providing yourself temporary relief, but long-term suffering. The Turnaround helps you collect a portfolio of perspectives. The problem is that our minds hate changing beliefs. We use these beliefs to justify passivity. A turnaround helps you identify many different kinds of beliefs, and then you can choose the ones that serve you versus the ones that hurt you. Your conscious mind can only process 50 bits of information per second. Your brain is processing 11 million bits of information (the sound of a voice, light hitting your retinas, the ambient temperature of the room). Your conscious mind is not aware of all this. Your brain has to filter out and leaves you with 0.00045% of the information that's coming in. The brain sees reality through a tiny pinhole of attention. It's the difference between reading a simple sentence or War and Peace twice every second. In order to make sense of all this data coming in, the brain has to see reality through a tiny pinhole of attention, just a tiny fraction of reality you're actually consciously aware of. The brain makes predictions based on our beliefs. How does the brain make sense of all this information? It has to make predictions, and those predictions are based on our beliefs. We call this predictive processing. Everything you experience, everything you see, everything you feel, and everything you're inspired to do is determined by the three powers of belief. The three powers of belief: The power of attention changes what you see The power of anticipation changes how you feel The power of agency changes what you do Limiting beliefs hide themselves. A limiting belief, by definition, is hidden because we think that what we see is accurate. We all think that what we experience is a fact. "I saw it for myself. I'm stating my truth. This is the way things are." But that's not true at all. The way the brain processes information is woefully inadequate to put that burden of truth on it. The Turnaround uses four questions to challenge limiting beliefs. Is it true? Is it 100% absolutely true? Who am I when I hold onto this belief? Who would I be without this belief? Nir's story: "My mother is too judgmental and hard to please." Nir sent his mom flowers for her 74th birthday. She said, "Thank you very much. But just so you know, the flowers were half dead. Don't order from that florist again." Nir instantly became his 13-year-old self and blurted out, "Well, that's the last time I order you flowers again." Venting is terrible. It does nothing but reinforce your beliefs about people because not only do we not see reality clearly, we certainly don't see other people clearly. We see our beliefs about people. We don't see reality as it is. We see reality as we are. The Turnaround opened up new possibilities for Nir. In 30 seconds, he determined: (1) that belief may not be true, (2) it doesn't really serve him, and (3) there might be a better way to be. He could actually be happier without that belief. The brain hates changing its mind. The turnaround asks you to look at the diametric opposite of your belief. We have a psychological immune system. Just like if you get a splinter in your finger, your body will mount an immune defense. The same happens in our minds. The more you feel "that's crazy, I don't wanna think that way, that can't be true," the more you need to explore it. Nir found four beliefs instead of one: My mother is too judgmental and hard to please My mother is NOT too judgmental and hard to please (maybe she was just conveying information) I am too judgmental and hard to please (I had rehearsed a script of effusive praise I wanted) I am too judgmental and hard to please towards myself (I felt incompetent that the flowers didn't work out) "Beliefs are tools, not truths." This is the most important thing Nir can convey. Which one of those four beliefs is true? All of them. None of them. Who cares? Beliefs are tools, not truths. Facts, faith, and beliefs are three different things. A fact is an objective truth about reality. It is so whether you believe it or not. The world is more like a sphere than it is flat. That is an objective fact. Faith is a conviction that does not require evidence. A belief is a conviction that is open to revision based on new evidence. Most problems come from thinking faith is a fact. Too many people think that their faith is a fact, and the things they think are facts are nothing more than beliefs, which are changeable. That's where most of our problems come from: interpersonal problems, personal problems, geopolitical problems. The original belief left Nir powerless. "My mom is too judgmental and hard to please" only has one way out: she has to change so I could be happy. Good luck. The other three beliefs, Nir could do something about. They were in his control. That enabled him. It freed him. It was liberating. Misattribution of emotion: hurt people hurt people. When we feel bad inside, if you've ever been bullied or been a bully yourself, this is always what happens. When you feel crappy on the inside, the first person you can find, you're going to punch him in the face, either physically or verbally, because you feel crappy. That's what Nir did to his mom because he felt bad. So now she should feel bad. How to handle narcissists: acknowledge they're operating with the best tools they have. That person is a narcissist? Awesome, because you don't have to be around them. But narcissists are operating from the best tools they have. It doesn't mean you have to include them in your life, but how do you stop suffering because of them? Acknowledge they are, and reduce your suffering around them. Nir called his mom and apologized. He said, "I'm so sorry for my behavior. I realize that you were trying to help me. You were conveying information about the flowers, so I wouldn't order from that florist. Thank you for that." That call completely changed their relationship. We expect people to change, but we can't even change ourselves. We can't do the simplest habits like eating better, exercising more, and managing our time. Why are we expecting other people to change? "Love is measured by the benefit of the doubt." When Nir's daughter was born, and he held her for the first time, he felt overwhelming adoration. Five minutes ago, she didn't exist, and now he loved her more than anything. He gave her complete, total benefit of the doubt. Why? She didn't do anything. She never sent him flowers. Babies poop, they need food all the time, they cry. But he never said, "she's crying to annoy me." We give babies the ultimate benefit of the doubt. Why don't we give adults the benefit of the doubt? When those babies grow up and become adults, we don't give them the benefit of the doubt. The narcissist in your life, the person who offends you, the person that hurts you, those are the best tools they have. It doesn't mean you have to be with them or include them in your life. The requirement is: how do you figure out how to stop suffering, to be at peace? We're constantly judging everything. Somebody cuts you off in traffic. Jerk. There's a line at the burrito place. The business thing didn't work out. The stock market goes down. Judging, judging, judging all day long. Good, bad, good, bad, good, bad. Expecting things to be different than they are. These are all limiting beliefs, and all they do is make us suffer. "We don't have relationship problems. We have belief problems." The problem is your belief that something should be different from what it is. It's like asking Nir's daughter to speak Russian. She can't speak Russian. What am I expecting? She doesn't have that ability. Why should I have expectations that people should meet my expectations? Nir and Julie now collaborate instead of argue. Since they started using the Turnaround technique, they used to have disagreements. Now they collaborate. If there's a very smart person, much smarter than Nir, who has an opinion, who he respects deeply and loves and admires, why would he fight with that person? He would collaborate with that person. Different perspectives are an asset to collect. If Nir sees things one way and Julie sees them differently, that's amazing. A new perspective. It's like collecting Pokémon cards. You've gotta get 'em all. Now with more perspectives, he can pick the best one. Writing sessions with Tim Urban, Shane Snow, and Mark Manson. Nir would work on his own and get distracted. But when he had other authors around him, they would sit down, write for 45 minutes, take a 15-minute break, write for 45 minutes, take a 15-minute break. They'd do that for three hours every morning. Not only is it inspiring, it keeps you on track. Find a focus friend. Somebody you can go to a coffee shop with and say, "I really need to focus. Let's keep each other accountable. Let's just work next to each other." Just like working side by side and seeing that other person also working on the stuff they should be working on keeps you accountable. Comparison is the thief of joy. Sometimes it can be tricky to be in a room with people who are super successful. Nir was the least successful author there at the time. You have to put it in perspective and know it's not about the outcome, it's about the journey. The best thing you can do is do the work. Time boxing is better than to-do lists. To-do lists are one of the worst things you can do for personal productivity because there's no constraint. You can always add more things to a to-do list. You come home from work every day and say, "I still have all these things I haven't done on my to-do list." A time box calendar is the most well-researched time management technique. What's much more effective than a to-do list is planning out what you're going to do and when you're going to do it. This is called an implementation intention. The goal now becomes not to finish anything. The goal is to work on that task for as long as you said you would without distraction. Make time to do the work, to turn your values into time. That's the secret to avoiding comparison. You put in the time to do the work. When you have it on your calendar, the goal is doing the work, not finishing the work. Lucky people literally see reality differently. They did a study where they asked people who were self-described lucky or unlucky to count the number of photographs in a newspaper. The unlucky people took on average two and a half minutes. The lucky people took 11 seconds. Why? On page two, one of the images said in big, bold text, "There are 43 images in this paper. Collect your prize." The unlucky people never saw it. Their brains took in the information, but it never became part of their conscious awareness. Entrepreneurs see $100 bills on the ground when everybody's walking over them. That is driven by beliefs. You believe you can will things to change. Walter Isaacson, in his biography of Steve Jobs, talked about his reality distortion field. That's exactly what this is. Entrepreneurs tend to be way more optimistic. They believe that lucky things happen to them, and so they see opportunities. "With our luck, it's going to be a bright, beautiful, sunny day." So many people say "with my luck" and follow it with something bad or negative. This belief and mindset of saying "with our luck" followed by something extremely positive is contagious and enjoyable. "Everything good happens to us." Nir's family says this whenever something good happens. There's no line at the TSA. "Everything good happens to us." The food was good. "Everything good happens to us." Little things, big things. Do more good things happen to them than bad things? Maybe, maybe not. Who cares? Beliefs are tools, not truths. When you believe those things, you notice them more. Your life actually does seem magical, blessed, like you're always lucky. 60% of opportunities are provoked luck. They studied super successful entrepreneurs and VCs and found that 60% of their opportunities provoked luck. They provoked the lucky thing that happened. How? Something as simple as sending a note of gratitude. Never hold back on a compliment. They're free. You get so much back from them. Thank you notes create provoked luck. Tina Seelig writes thank you notes compulsively. She wrote a thank you note to somebody. The thank-you note landed on someone's desk. You're sitting at your desk with things to do, and here's a thank you note, and to the right is your laptop with an email about a new opportunity. Who is going to get the call about that opportunity? You're top of mind. "Ryan's such a nice guy. He sent me that note. I'm going to call Ryan about that opportunity." Changing Nir's relationship with his mom changed his relationship with his daughter. Love is measured by the benefit of the doubt. When Nir started giving his daughter the benefit of the doubt, it pushed him to figure it out with his mom because he needed to give her the benefit of the doubt as he would want his daughter to give him the same. He's doing his best. He's not perfect. He makes mistakes. Those are the tools he's got. You go from loving your kid to liking them. Nir and his daughter went skiing together for his birthday. The entire three hour car ride up, the entire three-hour car ride back, they were chatting. They wrote an article together in the car. You always love your kid. As soon as your kid's born, you love them. But if you do your job right and things fall into place and you're very lucky, you like them. And that's a game changer. Reflection Questions What limiting belief are you holding onto where someone else has to change? What are three other ways to look at that same situation that would put the control back in your hands? Are you treating your beliefs like facts or like tools? Which beliefs are you holding because they're true, and which ones are you holding because they serve you? Who in your life are you not giving the benefit of the doubt? What would change if you gave them some grace? More Learning: #554 - Tim Urban: Become a High Rung Thinker #342 - Shane Snow: The #1 Leadership Skill is Intellectual Humility #596 - Arthur Brooks: The Art & Science of Happiness Podcast Chapters 02:19 Julie Introduced Nir to The Turnaround 04:28 Limiting Beliefs: How They Sap Motivation 07:51 Your Brain Filters 99.99% of Reality 10:17 The Flower Story: When Nir Became His 13-Year-Old Self 12:41 The Four Questions That Change Everything 15:25 Finding Four Beliefs Instead of One 19:08 Beliefs Are Tools, Not Truths 22:52 Narcissists Are Using Their Best Tools 27:53 Focus Friends: Writing with Tim Urban, Shane Snow, and Mark Manson 31:09 Comparison Is the Thief of Joy 32:04 Time Boxing Beats To-Do Lists 35:04 We Don't Have Relationship Problems, We Have Belief Problems 35:59 Why Nir and Julie Don't Fight Anymore 38:25 Explaining Worlds vs Changing People 42:03 You Can't Write Clearly If You Can't Think Clearly 43:23 Lucky People See $100 Bills on the Ground 46:29 "With Our Luck, It's Gonna Be a Beautiful Day" 49:38 Thank You Notes Create Provoked Luck 52:42 From Loving Your Kid to Liking Them 56:16 EOPC
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Welcome to the Learning Leader Show.
I am your host, Ryan Hawk.
Thank you so much for being here.
Go to LearningLeader.com for show notes of this and all podcast episodes.
Go to LearningLeader.com.
Now on to tonight's featured leader.
Near Isle is a Stanford lecturer, behavioral designer,
and one of the most rigorous thinkers in the world on why people,
do what they do and, more importantly, how to change it.
He's the author of three books.
His latest is called Beyond Belief,
the science-backed way to stop limiting yourself and achieve breakthrough results
during our conversation we discuss.
White Neer says most people don't have relationship problems.
They have perception problems.
And he shares the four questions that can transform any relationship.
Then the critical difference between facts, faith, and beliefs,
and why understanding that distinction is the key to changing anything about yourself.
And then NIR shares how we can manufacture more luck in our lives.
So good.
Ladies and gentlemen, please enjoy my conversation with Near Ayle.
This episode is brought to you by Insight Global.
Insight Global is a staffing and thoughtful.
professional services company dedicated to being the light to the world around them.
If you want to learn more about the CEO, Bert Bean and chief revenue officer, Sam Kaufman,
check out episode 424.
We had a fantastic conversation talking about my partnership with the great people at Insight Global.
If you need to hire one person, hire a team of people, or transform your business through
talent or technical services, Insight Global's team of 30,000.
people around the world have the hustle and grit to deliver. Hiring can be tough, but hiring the right
person can be magic. Visit Insightglobal.com slash learning leader today to learn more. That's
Insightglobal.com slash learning leader. I flip to the back of your book because I love reading
about the people that you love, the acknowledgement section. And I'm very curious about your partner,
both in business and in life, Julie.
She's the first thing you mentioned in the acknowledgement section.
How has Julie impacted you when it comes to belief?
Wow. Interesting.
So, yeah, hey, I always love interviews that start different.
And this is the first time anybody's ever asked me about Julian.
So I love this.
This is a great question.
So Julian I met the first week of college.
I was helping her dad.
I already moved into college and I helped her dad move a big little box.
and it turns out that that box was being delivered
to Julie's dorm room.
And that's how we met.
And that was in 1997.
And we've been married since 2001.
So we're gonna celebrate 25 years this year.
She has done so much for my beliefs.
I mean, you know, when you meet somebody,
you kind of come in with certain beliefs
and a certain personality, and then you kind of adapt.
And if it's not going well, you become more apart, right?
you become more as individuals, whereas if it goes well, I think you become more of a whole.
And if it goes really well, then you become a better version of yourself.
And that, I think, is definitely what Julie's done for me.
And in fact, a big part of the genesis of the book came from her introducing me to
this technique called The Turnaround, which comes out of the work from Byron Katie,
that she used with her mother to repair the relationship that she had with her mom.
And then I started, and then she kind of invited me to learn this.
technique as well. And I was just so impressed with it. And it started with interpersonal beliefs,
in our relationship beliefs. But then it kind of turned into, wow, you can use the same
technique in all kinds of different beliefs. And so it's something I use daily from anything from
daily annoyances to workplace interactions, to dreaming up the future, to getting myself in a good
mental place. This turnaround method is kind of at the core of how we can change our minds to
serve us rather than hurt us. What's the turnaround method? So the turnaround method is where you
push yourself to collect a portfolio of perspective. So the problem is, is that our minds hate
changing beliefs. We use these beliefs to justify passivity. And we call these limiting beliefs,
a limiting belief, according to my definition, I don't know if anybody else has defined them.
My definition of a limiting belief is a belief that saps motivation and increases suffering.
and it does that by creating short-term relief from discomfort.
So I hate public speaking.
I'm no good at public speaking.
And so I'm going to avoid public speaking, right?
I reduce my motivation to go on stage.
So I'm providing myself temporary relief, but long-term suffering.
Because long-term, I know I could have done a great job at that presentation.
I could have put myself out there.
So even though it was short-term comforting, it was long-term harmful.
That difficult relationship with my mom, you know, I don't want to,
have that conversation because, you know, she's always that way. She'll never change.
You know, that just goes to reinforce what I've always seen in her. So the limiting belief is
she is one way and I can't change that. Deliberating belief might be completely different in both
those scenarios. It's maybe I can change myself, right? So what a turnaround does is it helps you
identify many different kinds of beliefs. And then you can choose the ones that serve you versus
the ones that hurt you, the one that you've been holding on to just because that's what you've
always known and it provides some semblance of safety and passivity and reduces immediate
discomfort versus saying, hey, what could be just as true? And just collecting that portfolio
perspectives allows you to pick and choose. So to me, I feel like we all, especially from a
leadership perspective, but just in general in life, we'd all be better served if we spent more
time leaping outside of ourselves and trying to put ourselves in the perspective of other people,
trying to think about, even if you have like a really bad boss, Liz Weissman told me this 10 years
ago, I feel like on this podcast, because I was complaining about a, you know, they're terrible.
And she said, well, have you ever thought about what life is like from their perspective?
And it sounds basic.
Well, no, I hadn't, Liz.
I just complained about them, right?
We all complain about people.
it feels like the turnaround has elements of that, of perspective of, hey, let's pause for a moment
because we all see the world through our eyes and we're all pretty good at doing that.
But why not for a second, let's pause and see it from someone else's perspective.
Maybe that will help us understand why they made that choice, why they did that thing that we think is stupid.
Because we're only viewing it from our eyes, our beliefs, our perspective, and not theirs.
Is that an element of it?
Well, I think we all know the answer.
We all know the punchline.
Yeah, see it from somebody else's perspective.
Yeah, think positive.
Yeah, your beliefs are your destiny.
We kind of know that stuff, right?
Like the old Henry Ford quote or attribute to Henry Ford,
nobody knows if he actually says it,
is whether you believe you can or you can't, you're right.
So everybody kind of agrees with the end answer.
It's about how do we get there?
All right, think about it from someone else's perspective.
How?
You can't even understand your own perspective.
You want me to try and understand somebody else's?
That's good point.
The world is confusing enough.
And so what do we do?
We retreat into our limiting beliefs.
I'm wrong.
They're right.
I'm right.
They're wrong.
What we want to do with this process is exactly the opposite.
What we want to try and do is a step-by-step approach to help us break past what limiting
beliefs always do, which is that they hide themselves.
A limiting belief by definition is hidden because we think that what we see is accurate.
We all think that what we experience is a fact, right?
Like I saw it for myself.
I'm stating my truth.
This is the way things are.
But that's not true at all.
The way the brain processes information is woefully inadequate to put that burden of truth on it.
So why does this happen?
So your conscious attention can only process about 50 bits of information.
Your conscious mind can only process 50 bits.
It's about a sentence per second.
However, your mind is processing 11 million bits of information, right?
So the sound of my voice in your ears, the light hitting your retinas, the ambient temperature of the room,
your brain is aware of all this stuff.
Your conscious mind is not.
So your brain has to filter out and leaves you with 0.0045% of the information that's coming in.
So that's the difference between reading a simple sentence or war and peace.
twice every second. It's just way too much information. So in order to make sense of all this data
coming in, the brain has to see reality through a tiny pinhole of attention, just a tiny fraction
of reality do you actually consciously are aware of. And so how does the brain make sense of all this?
It has to make predictions. And those predictions are based on our beliefs. We call this predict processing.
And so everything you experience, everything you see, everything you feel, and everything you're
inspired to do is determined by the three powers of belief. And it is only when you force yourself
through an active process, not just, well, try and see it from their perspective, not just try and think
positive. That stuff doesn't work. It's kind of platitudes. You need to have a structured process
to teach you how to do that. And once you do that, you unlock your real potential. That's the game
changers, that you can do things you never thought possible. You can repair relationships that
you always thought you were broken. You can go into situations that you thought you were terrified.
fight of and come out the other end much better for it.
Okay, how do we do that?
Okay, how do we do that?
That sounds great. I'm in. Let's go.
Yeah, yeah. So maybe the best way to illustrate this is with a personal story about how my life
changed with this. So it started with my relationship with my mom. But you can substitute
a workplace relationship, a marriage relationship, any interpersonal relationship, any
belief that you hold. So here's, let me set it up for you. Here's what happened. A few years ago,
my mom had her 74th birthday. And I want to do that.
do something nice for her, Ryan. So I decided I was going to send her some flowers. Problem was
in Singapore and she was in Central Florida where I grew up. And so to get flowers to Central Florida,
I had to call a bunch of florists and I had to stay up late and look at reviews and like try to figure
it out to make sure the flowers arrived on time. I went to bed at 1 a.m., patting myself on the shoulder.
And I thought, okay, you did a nice job near. You did something good for your mom. She's going to love it.
I woke up the next morning. I called her out and said, hey, mom, happy birthday. Did you get the flowers I sent?
to which she says, yes, I did, thank you very much,
but just so you know, the flowers were half dead.
Don't order from that florist again.
I instantly became my 13-year-old self,
and I blurted out something I should not have,
which was, well, that's the last time I order you flowers again,
and I didn't immediately regret it.
Now I do, but you can imagine it went over about as well as you'd expect.
And after the call, I turned to Julie,
and I wanted her to sympathize with me.
I wanted her to tell me why my mother was clearly being too judgmental, right?
Like here I'd done something nice for her,
and now she's being all judgy about these flowers.
Are you like, how rude is that?
I wanted to vent.
And she said, how about we do a turnaround?
And I said, no thanks.
I do not want to do your stupid mumbo-jumbo, touchy-feely nonsense.
Like, we're supposed to vent here, right?
Like, isn't that what we're supposed to do?
Like, you can't let people not know how you feel.
You have to get it off your chest.
You have to vent.
You have to tell people what you really think.
You can't hold it inside.
Like, I need to tell you how terrible
what she just did to me was.
And she said, okay, well, let me just give you some space for that
in her very patient way.
And so I reluctantly decided to not vent
because at that point I had read
what the psychology literature says about venting.
Venting is actually terrible.
That does nothing but reinforce your beliefs about people
because not only do we not see reality clearly,
we certainly don't see other people clearly.
We see our beliefs about people.
We don't see reality as it is.
We see reality as we are.
And so I knew that venting was not going to help me.
So I did the work here.
I did what I'm about to share with you,
which is I first wrote down the belief.
And again, credit to Byron Katie,
she came up with these four questions.
And she basically channeled Aristotle.
This technique is over 2,500 years old.
So basically what you do is you write down the belief.
My belief was,
my mother is too judgmental and hard to please.
Okay, that was the belief.
And then she prompts us with four questions.
The first question is, is it true?
Okay, is that belief true?
Ryan, come on, back me up here.
Clearly, my mother is being too judgmental and hard to please
when I bought her these flowers.
She should have just said thank you.
Okay, obviously.
Next question.
Second question is, is it 100% absolutely true?
Okay, is it absolutely true?
It sounds like the first question.
It's actually not.
Is it absolutely?
Because when you add the word absolutely,
that means in all circumstances,
no exceptions.
was my mother, in this case, 100%, there's no other explanation she was being too judgmental and hard to please.
Well, maybe.
I mean, depends how you look at it, I guess.
Maybe there's a 1% chance, unlikely, but yeah, maybe there's a 1% chance that someone could see it differently.
Okay, fine.
Third question, who am I when I hold onto this belief?
How do I feel?
Who do I become?
How do I react?
Well, I mean, when I believe my mother is too judgmental and hard to please, I'm not very nice.
I'm short-tempered.
I'm not my best self.
Okay, here's the fourth question.
Who would you be without that belief?
If you had a magic wand, it sounds crazy,
but let's say you have a magic wand,
tap your brain, and boom, you don't have that belief anymore.
What would your life be like?
Who would you be?
If I had this magical power, it'd be pretty awesome.
I'd be more patient.
I'd be kinder.
I'd be more of myself,
as opposed to a 13-year-old version of myself.
So it kind of would be nice
if I didn't have to have that belief.
So what did I just do?
In about 30 seconds, I determined, number one, that belief may not be true.
It seemed very true.
A minute I go, maybe it's not true.
There's a shred of evidence.
Perhaps it's not true.
Two, it doesn't really serve me.
I don't feel good with that belief.
And three, there might be a better way to be.
I could actually be happier without that belief.
Okay.
So now something opens up.
For the first time, you can see a situation.
You force yourself just through these four questions.
And let me tell you, this is a very,
simple minor example. I think a lot of people can relate to if you have a mom like mine.
But I've seen this done with people who have the most extreme views politically and how, you know, their political opponents are causing them suffering. I've seen it with people who have trauma and baggage and, you know, a lot of suffering in their life. And I mean, you can, you can see how through these four questions, they open up new possibilities that they don't have to continue suffering. And so now comes the turnaround. The turnaround involves doing something absolutely
ridiculous that you're going to hate, which is it's asking you to look at that belief as the
diametric opposite. What would the exact opposite of that belief look like? Now, why are you going to
hate it? Because the brain hates changing its mind. We hate changing our minds. We have what's
called a psychological immune system, just like if you get a splinter in your finger, you have a
biological immune system. Your body will mount an immune defense. Well, the same happens in our minds,
that we do not like changing our minds.
We hate it.
And the more you feel that, oh, that's crazy.
I don't want to think that way.
That can't be true.
The more you need to explore it.
Because it's something that you are afraid to address
because it might reveal a deeper truth.
And that's exactly what happened to me.
So here's what happened to me.
First, I wrote down that first belief.
My mother is too judgmental and hard to please.
Now, what's the opposite of that belief?
The exact opposite is my mother is not too judgmental and hard to please.
Now, the job that I have to do here is figure out just any way, is there any possibility that that could be true?
I don't have to believe it, but is there any possibility that that could also be true in any alternative universe that my mother is not too judgment and hard to please?
Well, the more I thought about it, maybe she was just conveying information.
The flowers arrived half dead.
That's information.
That's not judgment.
That's just stating a fact.
maybe she was trying to help me
not order from this florist anymore
so I wouldn't get scammed
so she was trying to be helpful not hurtful
okay is it true I don't know
but it sounds like it could be plausible
all right so now I have two beliefs
let's see if we can go for a third one
another turnaround could be
not my mother's two judgment on hard to please
what's the opposite
I am too judgmental and hard to please
ooh yeah
okay how could that be true
well when I sat
with that for a minute, I realized that I had rehearsed in my mind a script of what I wanted my mom to say.
I had already pre-planned the effusive praise I wanted for being a good son and getting my mom flowers.
And when that praise didn't come, I lost it.
So who was being judgmental and hard to please?
I was.
Okay, now there's a fourth belief.
And this one really hit hard.
I am too judgmental and hard to please towards myself.
Okay, how could that be true?
Well, when I had spent a bunch of time planning for this thing that didn't work out the way I wanted it to work out,
I felt like I was incompetent.
Like here's this simple thing that didn't work out the way I wanted, that I paid a bunch of money for,
and I'd messed up, and now the money was wasted, and my mom doesn't like it,
and so that's the judgment on me.
And so I felt incompetent.
I felt like I was inept, and that didn't feel good, because I was,
judging myself.
And this is what's called
a misattribution of emotion.
That when we feel bad inside,
if you've ever been bullied
or been a bully yourself,
this is always what happens.
When you feel crappy on the inside,
the first person you can find,
you're going to punch him in the face
either physically or verbally
because you feel crappy.
And that's kind of what I did to my mom.
Because I felt bad,
so now she should feel bad.
Hurt people, hurt people.
That's right.
And we do this all the time.
And it started out something,
you know,
she was being too,
and I had a case to be made.
like, hey, anybody listening to this story is like, yeah, your mom probably shouldn't have said that.
And so I believe this firmly that that's why I blurted out and said, I'm not ordering you flowers,
because clearly that was true.
She was too judgmental.
But now I have four beliefs.
Okay, I have the original one plus three more.
Ryan, which one is true?
All of them?
None of them?
Who cares?
Here's the thing that's so important to realize about beliefs.
Beliefs are tools, not truths.
Beliefs are tools, not truth.
This is the most important thing I can convey.
A fact is an objective truth.
It is fact about reality.
It is so whether you believe it or not.
The world is more like a sphere than it is round.
Then it is flat.
Sorry, flat earthers.
It doesn't care what you think.
That is an objective fact.
Faith is something else.
Faith on the other end of the spectrum is a conviction that does not require evidence.
God rewards the righteous.
No evidence is required.
In between faith and fact is a belief.
A belief is a conviction that is open to revision
based on new evidence,
a conviction that is open to revision
based on new evidence.
What makes beliefs so special,
the reason they are so underutilized
is that they can change.
They can change.
And so most of our problems in the world,
interpersonal problems, personal problems,
geopolitical problems,
come from this unfortunate situation
where too many people think
that their faith is a fact
and the thing that they think are facts
are nothing more than beliefs,
which are changeable.
And so now, when I had these four beliefs,
I could look at them and say, huh, I've held on to this one, which says my mom is too judgmental and hard to please.
And that only has one way out.
The only way that I could be happy is if my mom changed with that belief.
Only one way.
She has to change so I could be happy.
Good luck.
That doesn't often happen.
The other three beliefs, well, now I could do something about that.
They were in my control.
And so that enabled me.
It freed me.
It was liberating.
It's a liberating belief.
I could do something I couldn't previously do.
could have a relationship with her because I could take care of my own garbage as opposed to
insisting that she admit that she was wrong, which was not going to happen. And so this is just
one quick example. You can do this with your interpersonal relationships, with yourself about how
you think about the world, with business challenges. I mean, the aspects of this go on and on and on.
I think it's an incredibly powerful technique. Okay, can I push on it a little bit? Please.
Okay. So your mom is one of the- By the way, changing my mind is the best thing ever, right? Because
I'm all about changing beliefs.
So I love it.
This is my love language.
I don't know if I'm going to change your mind.
I just want to say what I'm honestly thinking.
Okay.
So, and I don't even know how to phrase yet.
We'll figure it out.
Your mom is one of the four people that you dedicate the book to.
So I don't know if she's like the best example to use for this tool because in life,
you love your mom unconditionally.
She loves you unconditionally.
I'm guessing.
So there are other people in life at times.
I mentioned a boss or whatever to Liz Weissman story or others,
but there are sometimes we have to deal with people who are legitimately narcissists.
Not that I can factually say that,
but you know,
you know these people and we have to work with them or deal with them from time to time.
And yes,
we could try to turn around and we could try to put it more on us
and be more reflective and thoughtful like you are.
I want to be around people like you, by the way,
Like that are that reflective and thoughtful and curious.
That's my tribe.
That's what I'm talking about.
But you are the minority of the world by being that thoughtful of a person.
We can all have those thought bubbles of the people that come up that are not like your mom,
that are not going to love you unconditionally, that are actually trying to do harm to other people,
that are very self-centered.
You know what I'm saying?
Sure.
What about for those types of people that we've all encountered?
Do we just say, I'm just going to go the other way?
I mean, what do you do?
What do you do in that situation?
Let's go back to what is a limiting belief.
A limiting belief is a belief that decreases motivation and increases suffering.
So where does suffering come from?
What is suffering?
Suffering is what happens in the gap between what is and what you want to be.
So my suffering with my relationship with my mom was coming from the fact that I wanted her to
be different.
That's where my suffering was coming from.
Who said I have the power to change that?
Why should I expect her to be different?
So this limiting belief, that person's a narcissist.
What's implicit in that belief is, and that's bad.
Does it have to be bad?
Give me one way that that person in your life who's a narcissist is not bad.
The easiest is that person's a narcissist, awesome.
Awesome. You know why? Because I don't want to be around narcissists. I don't have to suffer anymore. I'm not expecting them to change. Right. We have to understand everyone, even the narcissists, they are operating from the best tools they have. And so how do we measure love? When we say, oh, I love you so much. What does that even mean? I love you a lot. I love it. What does that mean? To me, love is measured by the benefit of the doubt. How much benefit of the doubt we give to somebody. If you think about you, so for me,
kids, you give them the whole world.
Yeah.
Yeah.
Like some of you love more than I mean.
So my daughter, okay, when my daughter was born, I remember the day where she was born,
they let me wash her for the first time.
I take her downstairs after my wife gave birth and I was the first person to give her
a bath and wipe off all the gunk.
And I remember when I held her, I love, I just felt this overwhelming feeling of adoration.
Like, I'm just crazy about this girl.
Five minutes ago, she didn't exist.
And now, like, I love her more than anything.
And I gave her complete total benefit of the doubt.
Now, why do I love her so much?
Is it because she does things for me?
She never sent me flowers, right?
So she didn't do anything.
She didn't make me feel good.
I love her so much because I give her a complete benefit of the doubt.
Even though babies, you know, they poop, they need food all the time, they cry.
But I never said, oh, she's crying to annoy me.
She's doing that to hurt me.
That's stupid.
That's really delusional.
No, we give babies ultimate benefit the doubt because it's the only tool they have is to cry.
They're not doing it to annoy us.
and yet why is it that when those babies grow up and become adults,
we don't give them benefit of the doubt.
The narcissist in your life, the person who offends you, the person that hurts you,
that's the best tools they have.
That's the best tools they have.
You know, it doesn't mean you have to be with them.
It doesn't mean you have to include them in your life.
That's not the requirement.
The requirement is how do you figure out to stop suffering, to be at peace?
that's what I want in my life.
I want to be at peace,
as opposed to constantly expecting things to be different than they actually are.
And so that's what this technique does.
It helps you find the belief in your life that reduces suffering.
That's the whole idea.
It doesn't mean you have to be with them.
It doesn't mean you have to forgive them per se,
although forgiving means you had to judge them in the first place.
And so part of it is releasing that idea of needing to forgive in the first place,
because you can't forgive unless you have previously judged.
And so this big revelation for me is that I was constantly judging everything.
Everything, right?
Somebody cuts me off in traffic.
A jerk.
There's a line at the burrito place.
Oh my gosh.
The business thing didn't work out.
The stock market goes down.
Judging, judging, judging all day long.
It's all we do is judge.
Good, bad, good, bad, good, bad.
Expecting things to be different than they are.
Why?
These are all limiting beliefs.
And all they do is make us suffer.
They make us miserable.
Thank you for going along with that with me because I think what it is is, at least personally, it's an expectation problem.
Exactly.
I try to have high expectations for myself, for the people that I love in my life, both how I treat them and how I respect them and love them and care for them and them for me.
But maybe there are others who I have the same expectations for them, but that's not who they are.
And that's being.
And it's causing you to suffer.
Correct.
We don't have relationship problems.
We have belief problems.
It's your belief that something should be different than it is.
That people, it's like asking my daughter to speak Russian.
She can't speak Russian.
Like, what am I expecting?
She can't.
She doesn't have that ability.
So why should I have expectations that people should meet my expectations?
Now, it doesn't mean that if an employee is not performing that I have to keep them around.
I can fire them.
That's okay.
But I'm not going to suffer from that.
Here was the requirement.
here's what they did or didn't meet.
We may part ways, that's totally fine,
but it's not going to cause me suffering.
It's not going to cause me this emotional angst.
I'm not going to be ruminating about it.
I'm going to let it go because it's a limiting belief
to believe that things should be different than they are.
Okay, can we take a slight off-ramp for a second?
Sure.
It applies to chapter three.
Okay, it's about better relationships.
So I want to get to the secret to better relationships in a second.
But we were introduced by mutual friend of ours,
is a guy named Shane Snow.
I love Shane Snow.
I've been lucky to have dinner with him a few times in New York City.
He's been super helpful to me over the past 11 years.
You know, the first person I had on my list
that I wanted to interview when I launched this podcast 11 years ago.
He said, you gotta talk to Neer, he's the best, he's the man.
We've done a lot together, we wrote together.
And right before we started recording,
you talked about these sessions you would have with him
and a few other people, these writing sessions.
Can you take me inside that room for a session?
I know this is not part of what we're going to talk about.
I can't help it.
I can't help.
Can you take me like inside that room of you and Tim, Urban and Shane,
these other people I've had on my podcast,
what it was like, why you did it and how it helped you?
Yeah.
So this has to do with my second book, Indistractable,
how to control your attention and choose your life.
And one of the techniques in the book that I discovered
is this amazing power of focus through a mutual goal.
even if that mutual goal is just to stay focused.
It's incredible.
When I would work on my own, I would get distracted, I would check email, I would do this,
I would do that.
But when I had other authors around me and what we would do, we would sit down, I'd prepare some coffee,
I have a big old jug of coffee, and we'd sit down, we would write for 45 minutes,
then take a 15 minute break, then write for 45 minutes, take a 15 minute break.
We do that for three hours every morning.
Just sit there on your computers, type it away?
Yep, just type it away.
But we were with each other.
And so when you see the person next to you, you know, Mark Manson, typing for your
getting his book done and Shane was there and Tim Urban was there and we were all writing.
Not only is it inspiring, it keeps you on track. And so this is actually a technique I recommend
is to find what I call a focus friend. So somebody that you can go to a coffee shop with or go
to the company canteen and say, hey, you know what? I really need to focus. Let's keep each other
accountable. Let's just work next to each other. And just like working side by side and seeing
that other person also working on the stuff, they should be working on. So we would oftentimes
say, okay, what are you working on? What are you working on? All right, go. And that would keep
each other accountable and it turned out to be incredible. Mark finished his second book. I finished my
second book that way. Wow. Who could have thought at that time you guys would all go on to be these
big time famous authors? Were you like that at the time or no, you guys were just all trying to
figure it out together? Well, so I published my first book, Hooked, and Mark had published
subtle art. Shane had published, I think, one or two books at that point. And Tim hadn't published
his book yet, but he was a pretty famous blogger at that point as well. So yeah, we weren't like super
young in our careers. We were like getting going. Yeah, I just think there's a big power in putting
yourself physically in rooms with high standard get after it type people. And regardless of what
you're striving to do, having a practice of that. I know you mentioned you want to get back to that
when you get back to New York City of putting yourself in rooms with others who are getting after
you respect and they respect you.
That's just like a universal truth of life.
Yeah.
Now, there is definitely something to that.
There's also a dark side,
which you can't help, like, compare.
Yes.
And back to what we were saying earlier
about expectations and suffering
is that comparison is the thief of joy.
Yeah.
And so sometimes it can be tricky
to be like, wow, I'm in a room
with people who are super duper successful.
I was like the least successful author there at the time.
And so sometimes it can,
you have to put it in perspective and to know, you know, I'm following a process. It's not about the
outcome. It's about the journey. And it turns out the best thing you can do is do the work.
Well, I was just going to say, I mean, now that's even more prevalent than ever, Instagram,
social media in general, that you look out and you see the highlight reels of your friends,
of people you don't know of just the world in general. And it is so easy, even for the most
self-aware person in the world to start comparing themselves to other people's highlight reels.
How do you manage that?
I try and stick with the process.
I think that's the best line of defense.
So I'm a big fan of time boxing as opposed to to-do lists.
And so I think what most people do, we're told that if a task is under two minutes,
just do it, which I think is terrible advice because every email takes less than two minutes.
And so now you're spending your entire freaking day doing email.
And then two, to do lists are one of the worst things you can do for personal productivity because
there's no constraint, right?
You can always add more things to a to-do list.
And so you come home from work every day and you say, oh, my gosh, I still have all these
things I haven't done.
I'm my to-do list.
And you start saying stupid things like, oh, I'm no good at time management.
Well, no, it's not that you're not good at time management.
It's a stupid technique you're using.
To-do lists are dumb.
They don't have constraints.
Whereas a time box calendar, and this is a very old technique, I didn't make this up.
It's actually the most well-researched time management technique way, way better than
to-do lists. To-do lists have not been shown to be very effective at all. What's much more effective
than a to-do list is planning out what you're going to do and when you're going to do it. This is
called an implementation intention, very well studied. The reason this is so much better is because
the goal now becomes not to finish anything. Okay, this is super, super important. The goal is
not to finish anything. What is this crazy guy talking about? What do you mean? Isn't a to-do list
all about finishing stuff? Yeah, that's the problem because what do we do with the to-do list? We measure our
self-worth by how many cute little boxes we check off. I used to do a task and say, oh, I forgot to put that
on my to-do list. I'd write on my to-do list after I did it just so I could check it off. How stupid is that?
We all do it, man. What do we do with that? We do the urgent stuff. We do the fun stuff. We don't do
the important stuff that we need to do to move our lives and careers forward. Whereas when you have a
time box calendar, and this answers your question of how do you stop looking to your left and right
and comparing and contrasting with everybody you know, you put the time to do the work. So by having
on your calendar, the reason the goal changes, it's doing the work, not finishing the work.
So why is it so much better than a to-do list? Because when you start on a to-do list,
you work on something for five minutes. He said, well, let me, I have this question. Let me just go
check this thing on Instagram. Let me answer an email. Let me check my Slack channel.
And then what am I working on again? Oh, I totally forgot. Whereas the timebox calendar,
the only goal is to work on that task or do that thing for as long as you said you would without
distraction. That's it. Okay, not finishing working on that task without distraction. Why? Because now
you have a feedback loop. The biggest problem with stupid to-do list is that there's no feedback
loop. How long did that take you? You have to do a presentation. You have to do a write a blog post.
You have to, how long did it take? I don't know because you weren't tracking. Whereas when you say,
okay, I have a presentation to give, it needs to be 30 slides long. And when I worked on it for one hour,
I got three slides done.
Okay, well, that means I need this many time boxes to finish the entire presentation.
So now I have a feedback loop.
I can start assessing how long things take for me to finish.
So that's how you do it.
You make time to do the work, to turn your values into time.
That's the secret.
What is the secret to better relationships?
You write that you don't have relationship problems.
You have perception problems.
What do you mean by that?
So this is exactly what I was saying before about this relationship with my mom,
that the problem was not in the relationship.
It's not that anybody had to do anything different.
It's that I had the belief that she had to change so I could be happy.
So I was stuck on one and only singular belief.
Well, guess what?
I could be happy other ways.
I could be happy if I realized any of the other three beliefs that we discussed earlier,
that she was not being too judgmental and hard to please,
that I was being too judgmental and hard to please,
that I was being too judgmental and hard to please towards my self.
myself. Those three made me much happier than sitting there and waiting, she has to apologize
and admit she was wrong, right? Those didn't make me happy because it wasn't going to happen.
So that's the belief problem. You don't have relationship problems. You have belief problems.
I'm just thinking of you and Julie both living the turnaround. This is a weird question,
but how is it when you guys have a disagreement, perhaps a fight? Are you like, wait a second,
I didn't do the turnaround. I'm doing this wrong. Like, how does that go? When you're both so
knowledgeable of these tools. Guess what? You don't fight. Really? You don't fight. You and Julie
don't fight? Why would you fight with your spouse? We're on the same team. You fight with your enemy.
Why would you fight with your spouse? Let's say you have a disagreement about a parenting thing,
any decision. I mean, you know, you're living together. You do life together. So you're not the same
person. So you have disagreements, I assume. So how do you not fight? How do you make sure that
you stay aligned on the same team, headed in the same direction?
Honestly, since we have started this technique, we used to fight or not fighting, we used to have disagreements.
Now we don't even have disagreements.
We collaborate.
We collaborate because now this has become our habit.
This has become what we just default to.
If there's a very smart person, much smarter than me, who has an opinion, who I respect deeply, and I love and admire, why would I like fight with that person?
I would even disagree with that person. I would collaborate with that person. It's like going to a mentor
and saying, what do you think we should do with our daughter as having this and this challenge?
We've had challenges. That doesn't go away, okay? Life never gets easier. You get stronger.
That's a very important point. Life never gets easier. You just get stronger. Stuff keeps coming,
right? But we don't suffer from it. Now we collaborate through it. And that's a completely different
mindset. We're not adversarial. There's no need to be because
I know she's operating with the best tools she has.
She knows I'm operating with the best tools I have.
And because we have this understanding that if we see things differently, that's an asset.
Awesome.
Now we celebrate the fact, okay, I think things should be this way.
You don't think so.
Amazing.
A new perspective, right?
Because think about it like collecting that portfolio perspective, as we talked about earlier.
I came in with one.
It took work to get to the other three.
Now if I have a person who comes in with another perspective, amazing.
And now it's like collecting Pokemon cards.
You've got to get them all.
Then, now with more perspectives, I can pick the best one.
So it's a game changer.
Wow.
You guys should go on the road, teach that stuff.
You know what, though?
Here's the thing.
People don't want to hear this.
Yeah, they do.
Why would you say that?
My limiting belief at this very moment, and this is what I'm doing the best with,
is that by sharing this stuff, I'm sharing what's worked for me.
I don't want to change people, right?
It's hard enough to have changed myself, to be where I am today.
And that's what I share in my work.
When I try and change people, when I try and take this stuff on the road and say,
hey, here's the right way to be.
Instantly people come up with excuses.
They instantly want to share all their limiting beliefs.
Well, you understand.
My husband is this and my wife is that and she did this and he did that.
And they'll come with a million reasons why they are the source of the problem.
Never me.
Hate being me.
Oh, definitely not me.
And so it doesn't go anywhere.
So what I've tried to do, and this is why Julie is very private about this as well, is we try and figure out for ourselves.
And if we learn some lessons along the way, we would try and share them this way.
And you ask actually excellent question.
Most people don't ask these kind of questions.
Well, thank you.
I appreciate that.
Your work, though, is absolutely transformational, correct?
Thank you.
I appreciate it.
Thank you.
You would agree, though.
That's correct.
I don't think that's a belief.
I think that's a fact.
It's transformational.
By definition, transformation means change.
Hopefully for the better.
I hope my work's transformational.
So you say you don't want to change people, but you do, right?
I mean, that's what your work does.
It by definition changes people if they read it.
They listen to you.
They listen to this podcast.
They actually think about it.
They have a conversation with their husband or wife about it.
They do some work.
And then they try to use the tools to improve.
to get better, to actually put it into play
instead of just being a theory,
because I think that's why your work is so good,
why it's helped me long before we ever even talked,
right, which is the first time,
is that it, by definition, is transformational,
which then means it's changed me for the better
and lots of other people, too.
So in a way, you say you don't want to change people,
but you do, you do change people in a great way.
Well, I appreciate that.
That's very, very kind of you.
I guess that's not my goal.
When you say,
what's your goal?
people if people if people want to change wonderful that's fantastic it's benefited my life and it can help
others there's nothing better like when i wake up in the morning and i get an email from someone as i did
this morning saying here's how my life changed it's amazing it's a beautiful beautiful feeling
but that's not what i want that's not what i'm expecting if it happens beautiful that's a it's a
wonderful thing well what do you want then uh i want to explain the world so they can be made better
that's my mission that's what i do i do the explaining part
And by the way, this happens with a lot of folks, right?
Like, you know who the most successful people are?
They're not the people selling you online programs about how to make online programs.
That's not where the insights are.
The insights are locked up in secret, right?
Because they don't, like, there's no incentive to share it.
And frankly, like, knock on wood, life has been good.
We've started three companies together.
Julie and I have started three businesses.
This is our latest business, this writing stuff.
Which I do for me.
Frankly, I just, I like to write.
I like to process.
I write books on stuff I'm stuck on.
So when I was getting distracted all the time,
I wrote indestructible to try and figure out how to manage a distraction.
When I learned about the power of beliefs and how to utilize them in my life,
I wrote Beyond Belief.
And if others benefit from that as well, that's fantastic.
But I'm not out there selling courses.
And that's not my, because I don't have to.
Yeah.
Well, no, it's awesome.
Isn't writing, though, such an amazing tool for both clarity.
and learning. That's why all leaders, whether it's public or not, should have some form
of writing practice because it creates such clarity. It helps you understand what you really
believe, the process of getting those messy thoughts out of your head onto the page like you
guys were doing in that room together and like you and Julie do now. That is valuable as a tool,
as a practice as exist if you want to be a clearer, more informed thinker. It is.
the most underutilized secret weapon.
I could not agree more because you can't write clearly
if you can't think clearly.
And so writing forces you to sit down
and put in text, right, in black and white,
what you believe.
Now, the next level, okay,
so you can write, right, right, right, right, right.
You can have a bunch of gobbledygook,
which is the first level,
because there's even more gobbledygook in your brain.
So when you actually get it out on paper
and write it down,
then you can actually see what you believe.
then the next level,
if you really want clarity,
is to try and teach
that when you try and give a talk,
turn a 350-page book
into a 45-minute talk,
that's going to force you to get real
in terms of what really matters,
not just what's fluff.
Yeah, I love it.
Okay, you write a little bit about luck.
Luck isn't chance.
This is a great chapter title.
How do you see opportunities
that others miss?
So we're out here.
We're all looking for the opportunities.
We're all missing them.
Then somebody else does something and you go,
ah, they just got lucky.
He just got lucky with that thing, right?
So you're right.
Luck isn't chance, though.
So how do we see opportunities that others miss?
So this is the first power of belief.
There's these three powers of belief,
the power of attention, which changes what you see,
the power of anticipation, which changes how you feel,
and the power of agency, which changes what you do.
And so in the power of attention,
the power of change what you see,
what the research literature shows us is that having certain beliefs,
literally changes what you're able to see.
So back, we talked about the 11 million bits
versus 50 bits of information
that you're able to process,
that tiny pinhole of attention
that you can see reality through,
our beliefs shape what that pinhole is focusing on
and how it's being filtered in our brain.
So let me give you a good example.
They did a study where they asked people
who were self-described lucky or unlucky
to do a very simple task.
The task was,
take a newspaper, which the researchers had given them, same newspaper, both groups,
and they said, would you please count the number of photographs in this newspaper, right?
The number of images in this newspaper.
The people who were self-identified as unlucky, people who thought that they believed that they were unlucky,
they took on average two and a half minutes to finish this task.
Okay.
The people who were self-described as lucky, who believed they were lucky, whether they were lucky or not,
It didn't matter.
It's people who believed they were lucky.
They didn't take two and a half minutes.
They took 11 seconds.
Why the difference?
The difference was that in this experiment,
every paper that they gave had on page two,
one of the images said in big bold text,
you couldn't miss it,
there are, whatever it was,
43 images in this paper,
collect your prize.
It literally told them the answer.
The people who were self-described unlucky,
believe they were unlucky, they never saw it.
They literally, their eyes glanced over it.
Their brains took in the formation,
but it never became part of their conscious awareness.
It never made it into that pinhole of 50 bits of information per second.
So to them, it didn't exist, whereas the lucky people saw it.
So they literally saw reality differently because they believe that opportunities come,
that things like this happen.
And so that's just a great example.
In entrepreneurship, we see this all the time.
You know, Walter Isaacson in his biography of Steve Jobs talked about his reality distortion field.
And that's exactly what this is, that entrepreneurs, one, they tend to be way more optimistic.
They believe that lucky things happen to them.
And so they see opportunities.
You know, to be an entrepreneur, you've got to see things differently.
I mean, you see $100 bills on the ground when everybody's walking over them, right?
You have to see this opportunity.
And so that is driven by beliefs, that you believe you can will things to change.
Proenoia, right?
What's that?
talked about pro noia before did i hear this learn this from you oh not for me but i i know the
phenomenon you know prano right good's gonna have pro noia is this belief that the world is out
to inspiring right to treat you well that good things are going to happen i know i cut you off so i
apologize that i'm gonna get back to this in a second but near like it actually made me think of a very
personal story about a few days before my wedding day with my wife miranda she's one of the things
i love most about her is is her she shares this trait with my dad
That is being insanely optimistic all the time.
Love it.
And so part of our wedding was planned to be outside, some of the reception stuff.
So we looked at the weather forecast and it showed it was going to rain, which, you know,
puts a damper on a wedding if you're going to do some of it outside.
You've got to move and do all the stuff.
And she, I'll never forget it because we say it all the time now.
Miranda looked at me and she said, with our luck, it's going to be a bright, beautiful, sunny day for all of
of our guests and our family, with our luck. So many people in the world say with my luck,
and then they follow it by something that is bad or negative. And I remember that it was just a few
days before we got married that I was like, man, that's the right woman. What a way to go through life.
And now we say it all the time. We both say to each other. Our children say it with our luck.
Now, that doesn't mean it's going to come true. That doesn't mean we're right, but it means we believe in
pro-noia. We believe in that. We've had our share of adversity like every other family,
like every other couple. We've all have it, right? It's coming. We know it. But this belief
and this mindset of saying, with our luck, fill in the blank of something that's extremely
positive, it is so much more enjoyable to go through life with a person who looks at the world
like that. It's so nice, man. It's contagious to. It's contagious to the people around you.
So this idea of, with our luck, something great's going to happen.
Oh, I'm just telling you, man, it is contagious and it's fun and it's so much more enjoyable to walk through the world with people like that.
It's so true.
And here's the ironic thing is that it becomes true.
So my family does something similar.
We say whenever something good happens, we say, ah, everything good happens to us.
Right?
We just celebrate, right?
Like there's no line at the TSA.
Hey, everything good happens to us.
The food was good.
Oh, you see, we found this cool restaurant.
Everything good happens to us.
Like, little things, big things, everything good happens to us.
Now, do more good things happen to us than bad things?
I don't know.
Maybe.
Maybe not.
Who cares?
Beliefs are tools, not truths.
Beliefs are tools, not truth.
So you can choose to believe it.
And here's what's crazy.
When you believe those things, you notice them more.
So to you, your life actually does seem like it's magical.
It does seem blessed.
It does seem like you're always lucky because that's what you are letting through those 50 bits of
information. You're seeing life through that lens. And so what this study demonstrated with people
counting the photos was that they did become more lucky because they thought they were more lucky.
So they saw opportunities that others missed. It's similar with maybe you have the science
behind this with gratitude. So my thinking is if you're always looking for opportunities to say
thank you to somebody, whether you write them notes, you text them, you call them, you say it to them
to their face, having this mindset, my friends, Brooke, Codds, Garenstoke,
They have thankful Thursdays.
But what I noticed, it's not only on Thursdays when they write like three handwritten notes to people they're grateful for every Thursday.
It's not only Thursdays that they're more grateful.
It's every day.
It's all the time of regularly saying I'm the type of person who lives with gratitude.
I say thank you to people all the time.
Like we have a contest with my girls is, you know, how many times can you say thank you when we stand in line at Chipotle, right?
Because there's like four or five different people that work on your bowl or your breeder or whatever.
you're going to get. And you say, you want white rice or brown rice? Brown rice. They do it. Thank you.
Okay. The next person puts the chicken. Thank you. And so just this idea of saying thank you
regularly, it becomes your default setting. It opens your eyes out into the world to like,
you just see more good things happening because you're constantly looking for opportunities to say,
thank you. It's, again, it's another cool way to go through life instead of saying, oh, that person,
or they did that thing bad.
You're looking for opportunities
for people doing well
so that you can thank them.
That's absolutely right.
And in fact,
we know in a business setting
that having gratitude,
and I learned this from Tina Selle,
against Stanford,
this is called Provoked Luck.
They did a study on salespeople,
and they found that the salespeople
who showed gratitude more often,
they found that 60% of their opportunities
were provoked luck,
meaning that 60% of the opportunity,
opportunities that came their way, they provoked the lucky thing that happened. So how does that happen?
How do they create luck? How do you provoke luck? So something as simple as sending a note of
gratitude. And this is something that I try and do all circumstances, right? If somebody makes me feel
just a little bit of happiness, never hold back on a compliment, never ever hold back on a compliment.
They're free. You get so much back from them. That's not why you should do it, but it just turns out
that that's a fact of life that you just get so much back. How does that happen? You know, you write a note,
Tina Selle does this, she writes thank you notes compulsively.
Like just, hey, thank you for this, a little reminder, a poster note, thank you for that.
And she gives us a great example of, she wrote a thank you note one time to somebody.
And the thank you note landed on someone's desk.
And think about it, right?
You're sitting at your desk and you've got all these things to do.
And here's a thank you note.
And then to the right of that thank you note is your laptop where you've got an email about a new opportunity that's come up.
Well, who is going to get the call about that opportunity?
Well, your thank you notes right there.
Oh, yeah.
Ryan's top of mind.
Ryan's such a nice guy.
He sent me that no.
Wow, what a sweetheart.
Yeah.
You know what I'm going to call Ryan
about that opportunity.
You're just top of mind more often,
and that's how you provoke luck to come back at you.
Near, there's a million more things we could get to.
We touched on just a little bit of your book.
I love it.
I'm grateful for you that you sent it to me.
I want to close with one more question.
Since we started personal,
we've touched on personal moments throughout.
I want to end with a personal question.
So fast forward.
to one year from today, okay?
This is called the champagne question.
You and Julie, I don't know if you drink champagne or not, it doesn't matter.
You and Julie, though, let's say for the instance of the question, are popping bottles.
You guys are celebrating like crazy.
What are you celebrating?
Wow.
What are we celebrating?
A year from now, huh?
One year.
The thing that comes to mind is that my daughter's going to college, and so we'll be celebrating, sending her off to school.
Yeah, that little baby grew up.
How do you feel about that?
I'm going through the exact same thing right now.
Yeah, how old are your kids?
We have four.
They'll all be in college next year.
Wow.
All four are going to college next year?
Yeah, yeah.
Holy smokes.
So one of the byproducts of changing my relationship with my mom
is that I started changing my relationship with my daughter, right?
These two incredibly important women in my life.
Because, you know, love is measured from the benefit of the doubt.
and so when I started
re-giving my daughter benefit the doubt
that a few years ago
we were kind of having difficulty
we were arguing this was before I started writing
Beyond Belief and I learned about these techniques
and then expecting the grace
from my daughter that she would give me benefit of the doubt
pushed me to figure it out with my mom
because I needed to give her the benefit of the doubt
as I would want my daughter to give me
benefit of the doubt that I know that in my
my shoes, I'm doing my best.
Like, I'm not perfect.
I make mistakes.
It's the tools I got.
And you know what?
My mom as well.
And you know what?
My daughter too.
And everybody, even the narcissist, asshole, person who's, we're all just trying our best, right?
With the tools we have available based on our beliefs, based on our history.
And so that could completely change our relationship.
We just, for my birthday, my birthday was a few weeks ago, we went skiing together.
And let me tell you, Ryan, the entire three-hour card-writers.
ride up, the entire three-hour car ride back.
We were having a conversation.
We were just chatting.
We wrote an article together in the car.
We had an idea for like a blog post we wanted to do together.
She's into writing as well.
And it was just amazing because like, you always love your kid.
As soon as your kid's born, you love them.
But if you do your job right and things fall into place and you're very lucky, you like them.
And that's a game changer, right?
You go from loving them to, I like to like you.
You like you. I was sitting across the table from we had dinner after we went skiing together.
And I just like you. Like you're a good person. Like you're a friend. And that's just,
gosh, is there anything better? Then frankly, I don't know if I would have gotten there had I not
learned these techniques of seeing my beliefs differently. Oh man, that's as good as it gets.
Thank you for sharing. The book's called Beyond Belief, the Science Backway.
To Stop Limiting Yourself and Achieve Breakthrough Results. Like your other books, man, I think you're
getting better and your past ones were awesome. And so I've been a follower of your work. I'm so
glad and grateful for Shane for connecting us. I know this will not be the last time we talk.
And I'm pumped, man, to continue our dialogue as we both progressed. Near, thank you so much.
Anytime. You call me anytime and we'll commiserate as we miss our daughters and kids together.
Anytime. I love it, man. Thank you so much. It is the end of the podcast club. Thank you for being a member
the end of the podcast club. If you are, send me a note, Ryan at learningleader.com.
Let me know what you learn from this great conversation with Near Isle. A few takeaways from my notes.
Beliefs are tools, not truths. The most powerful ones aren't the ones you can prove.
They're the ones that help you live better. And then you do not have relationship problems.
You have perception problems. Change what you believe about someone. And you can
change what you're capable of seeing in them.
And then lucky people aren't necessarily lucky.
They see opportunities others miss because their beliefs have trained their attention
to look for them.
With our luck, it's going to be a beautiful, bright, sunny day.
It's so nice to be around people like that.
And then the belief that once served you may now be your biggest obstacle.
The goal isn't to find the right belief.
and hold it forever.
It's to stay curious enough and to keep revising.
NIR really made me think throughout this entire conversation.
I hope you found it useful.
Once again, I would say thank you so much for continuing to spread the message and telling
a friend or two.
Hey, you should listen to this episode of The Learning Leader Show with Near Isle.
I think he'll help you become a more effective leader because you continue to do that.
And you also go to Spotify, Apple Podcast, subscribe to the show.
Rate it five stars, hopefully.
thought for you by doing all of that. You are giving me the opportunity to do what I love on a daily basis.
And for that, I will forever be grateful. Thank you so, so much. Talk to you soon. Can't wait.
